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UMD Inventors to Change Future of Lithium Ion Batteries

UMD Inventors to Change Future of Lithium Ion Batteries

Researchers at the University of Maryland (UMD) are revolutionizing energy storage with a new class of aqueous electrolytes that makes batteries and other electrochemical devices safer, cheaper, and greener.

The safety hazards of today’s lithium-ion batteries are well known – toxicity, instability, and flammability – notably grounding the Boeing 787 Dreamliner after a series of fires.

These shortcomings have inspired a team of UMD researchers, with collaborators from the U.S. Army Research Laboratory, to find a solution: a Water-in-Salt electrolyte that offers safety without sacrificing energy density or power density.

“Lithium-ion batteries are commercially prevalent electrochemical energy storage systems that use organic liquids as electrolyte solvents,” said Dr. Chunsheng Wang, professor in UMD’s Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering. “Our Water-in-Salt invention is non-flammable and shows promise in addressing the serious issues of fire safety and toxicity that exist in current commercial lithium ion batteries.”

The Water-in-Salt electrolytes were created through the joint efforts of Dr. Wang and fellow UMD Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering researcher Dr. Liumin Suo, and the U.S. Army Research Laboratory, led by Dr. Kang Xu (ARL Fellow). Participating ARL researchers include Dr. Oleg Borodin, Dr. Arthur Cresce, Dr. Selena Russell, and Dr. Marshall Schroeder. Funding for the project is being provided by the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy (ARPA-E).

Dr. Wang and his fellow researchers are eager to take these electrolytes to the next step and create a battery that will demonstrate the power and promise of this new technology.

“We plan to transition this scientific breakthrough into a real product,” said Dr. Wang. “We will receive $3M from ARPA-E with $1M matching to demonstrate the real value of our invention. We are working with Saft American Inc, Army Research Lab, and Liox to scale up our technology into a 500 Watt-hour battery pack. From there, we hope that our batteries can find their way into a variety of applications in civilian and military sectors, such as grid storage or on-board energy storage components on naval submarine vessels.”

Looking toward the future, this invention will be a critical step in fulfilling the long-awaited hopes of replacing the current electrolyte solvents found in lithium-ion batteries.

“Our invention has the potential to transform the energy industry by replacing flammable, toxic lithium-ion batteries with our safe, green Water-in-Salt battery,” said Dr. Wang. “This technology may increase the acceptance and improve the utility of battery-powered electric vehicles, and enable large-scale energy storage of intermittent energy generators like solar and wind.”

UMD’s Office of Technology Commercialization has nominated the invention for the Invention of the Year award in the Physical Sciences category. Winners will be announced at the Celebration of Innovation and Partnerships on May 9th as part of the University of Maryland’s “30 Days of EnTERPeneurship.”